Arrests made in New York City on 'day of anger' as anti-Israel agitators burn US flags and desecrate World War I monuments
A group of faculty supporting pro-Palestinian protests at the University of Chicago on Monday criticized other schools for calling on police to help quell anti-Israel protests.
“The use of police on college campuses across the country sets a dangerous precedent for the future of our country,” Allison Field, a Palestinian associate professor at the University of Chicago's School of Justice, said at a press conference.
“Yesterday, university administrators called off negotiations with student protesters. We urge them to resume negotiations in good faith and continue to respect freedom of expression on campus,” Field said.
“Universities should not deploy police to suppress student protests. Doing so would violate their duty to protect students and their right to free expression. Universities across America “The use of police on campus sets a dangerous precedent for the future of our country,” she added.
“The use of police force in these situations is not to protect people, but rather to intimidate and silence them,” Field said. “The students’ peaceful ways of sitting, chanting, singing, and vocalizing are expressions of their commitment to nonviolence and dedication to the cause.”
Last week, students at the University of Chicago encampment said, “We call on the University of Chicago to withdraw from its partnerships with militarized Israeli universities and weapons manufacturers that arm Israel, and to end its relationship with the Israel Institute. I demand that it be cut off.” Chicago will divest from all the interconnected forces of death and violence to which it is currently complicit, particularly fossil fuel production, UCPD, and construction projects that facilitate the displacement of the South Side. ”









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